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Journal of Clinical Microbiology, February 2000, p. 607-612, Vol. 38, No. 2
Laboratory of Bacteriology and Medical
Mycology, Istituto Superiore di Sanità,
Rome,1 and Immunobiological Research
Institute of Siena, Chiron Vaccines, Siena,2
Italy
Received 28 June 1999/Returned for modification 11 October
1999/Accepted 10 November 1999
Enterotoxigenic Bacteroides fragilis (ETBF) strains are
associated with diarrheal disease in children. These strains produce a
zinc metalloprotease enterotoxin, or fragilysin, that can be detected
by a cytotoxicity assay with HT-29 cells. Recently, three different
isoforms or variants of the enterotoxin gene, designated bft-1, bft-2, and bft-3, have been
identified and sequenced. We used restriction fragment length
polymorphism analysis of the PCR-amplified enterotoxin gene to detect
the isoforms bft-1 and bft-2 or
bft-3 borne by ETBF. By sequencing the portion of the bft gene corresponding to the mature toxin in some strains
and applying allele-specific PCR for strains categorized as
bft-2 or bft-3, we found in our collection two
strains harboring bft-3, a variant that had been described
for isolates from East Asia. Analysis of 66 ETBF strains from different
sources showed that bft-1 is the most frequent allele,
being present in 65% of isolates; it is largely predominant in
isolates from feces of adults, while bft-2 is present in
isolates from feces of children. This association is statistically
significant (P, 0.0064). Sixteen strains were examined by
Southern hybridization using, as probes, the bft and second
metalloprotease genes, both included in a pathogenicity islet. Five
strains were found to harbor double copies of both genes, suggesting
that the whole islet was duplicated. Four of these strains, harboring
bft-1 (three strains) or bft-2 (one strain), were found to produce a large amount of biologically active toxin, as
determined by a cytotoxicity assay with HT-29 cells. The strains harboring bft-3, either in a single copy or in double
copies, produced the smallest amount of toxin in our collection.
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Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
The Alleles of the bft Gene Are
Distributed Differently among Enterotoxigenic Bacteroides
fragilis Strains from Human Sources and Can Be Present in
Double Copies
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Laboratory of
Bacteriology and Medical Mycology, Istituto Superiore di Sanità,
Viale Regina Elena 299, 00161 Rome, Italy. Phone: (39) 06 4990-2331. Fax: (39) 06 4938-7112. E-mail: pantosti{at}iss.it.
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